181 P. 784 | Cal. | 1919
Certiorari to review the award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of Fred Weiss, who was injured by having his hand caught in a printing-press to which he was "feeding" pieces of pasteboard that were cut by the machinery into proper shape for use in the making of pasteboard boxes.
[1] The injury was suffered by the applicant for compensation in the month of December, 1917, and his rights must be measured by the Workmen's Compensation Act of 1913, as amended in 1915, which was then in force.
The applicant was twenty years of age at the time of the injury. He had worked for the Hyman Brothers Box Label Company, generally as a "press-feeder," three times, his terms of employment aggregating about nineteen months. He had worked for another corporation, also as a press-feeder, for two years and two months. It thus appears that he was an experienced workman almost of the age of majority.
The press at which Mr. Weiss was working when he was injured was equipped with a stationary upright plate called the "bed" and a plate called the "platen" which repeatedly opened and closed against the "bed." In operating the press he stood in front of it, removing the cut pasteboard with his left hand and inserting the uncut sheets with his right hand. Sometimes a cardboard sheet would slip off the bed of the press and fall into the body of the press, and sometimes some of the uncut pieces would fall into the press from the "feed-board" upon which the operator kept a supply. In such case the press could be stopped at once by moving a lever and the card or cards could be removed without danger. The injury to the applicant occurred while he was reaching into the body of the moving press for a sheet or sheets which *425 had fallen. Asked by the examiner if that was a proper thing for him to do, he said, "Well, it might not have been," and to the question, "Why not?" he replied as follows: "When I first came to Hyman Brothers Box and Label Company, I was told not to grab any sheets, when I first came there. That was three or three and a half or four years ago. Then I left Hyman Brothers again and came back, after feeding that many years, and being that I was experienced in feeding, I was not told that any more." Following this statement the questions and answers were as follows:
"Q. You knew then that that instruction had been given you and you knew it was not a proper thing to do? A. Yes.
"Q. Had anybody ever seen you do that before, any of the foremen? A. I don't know. I couldn't tell you that.
"Q. You had done it two or three times before? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. And you did it this time? A. Yes, sir."
At another place in the return to the writ his testimony is reported as follows:
"Q. Mr. Weiss, if you were reaching into that machine to take out loose cards that had fallen in there while the machine was in motion, you were doing something you knew was not exactly proper, weren't you? A. The loose ones, you mean?
"Q. Yes. A. Yes, sir.
"Q. But nobody had said anything to you in the last year or two about doing that? A. No, sir.
"Q. But when you first came there, as I understand you, you were instructed never to reach into the machine? A. When I first started to learn. That was the first place I fed. I was just starting to learn to feed at that time.
"Q. What did they say to you? A. They told me, 'You don't want to put your hand into the machine if any sheets fall down, because you can get more sheets than you can hands.'
"Q. What would have been the right thing to have done if those sheets had fallen in there? A. Stop the machine. It didn't do any harm and you could still keep running."
In his application to the Industrial Accident Commission for compensation Mr. Weiss had described the occasion of the injury as follows: "Some sheets of box board dropped from the feed-board into the press and applicant reached with his *426 left hand to catch them, the left hand and arm being caught between bed and platen."
The Industrial Accident Commission found that in attempting to catch the card "the employee acted instinctively without reflection and such act did not constitute willful misconduct and that, therefore, said injury was not caused by willful misconduct of the employee." Petitioners attack this finding as contrary to the evidence. This, they say, is the case of an employee who, with full appreciation of the danger, violated specific instructions given him for his own protection. The question before us, therefore, is whether or not the described actions of the employee amounted to willful misconduct. [2] That an answer to such a problem goes to the jurisdiction of the Industrial Accident Commission is settled by decisions of this court. (Great Western Power Co. v. Pillsbury,
The doctrine that an unpremeditated and impulsive act in violation of orders may not be willful misconduct finds some support in the authorities, but usually nonage is an element of the decisions in which such doctrine has been upheld. It seems to us, however, that the age of the person injured does not necessarily make a material difference. The tendency to recover something falling from a machine; to reach for a hat blown off the head by a sudden gust of wind; to apply the brakes to a "skidding" automobile — in short to perform acts of many sorts upon the impulse of the moment, is not the failing of youth alone. The true tests to be applied have reference to the nature of the work being performed and the circumstances of each particular case. This court has been at pains more than once to define "willful misconduct." [3] Perhaps the best definition (and, incidentally, the one cited by both parties to this controversy) is the one found in the opinion in GreatWestern Power Co. v. Industrial Accident Com.,
The authorities sustain the views expressed above. InWhitehead v. Reader [1901], 2 K. B. 48, it was held that where a man tried to replace a belt which had slipped from the machinery, such act may be regarded as venial, and not willful misconduct on his part. In McNicholas v. Dawson [1899], 1 Q. B. 773, it was announced that each case must depend upon its own peculiar facts and that the breaking of rules does not necessarily constitute serious misconduct. In Peru Basket Co.
v. Kuntz (Ind.App.),
Petitioners have cited many authorities to the effect that where a servant goes outside of the scope of his authority, although still upon the employer's premises, he may not recover for any injury. Typical of such decisions isWilliamson v. Industrial Accident Com.,
Petitioners' only other objection is to the amount of the award which, it is asserted, was in excess of that which the commission was empowered to give. With this view we agree.
Section 17c of the Workmen's Compensation Act is in its essential parts as follows: "If the injured employee is under twenty-one years of age . . . his average weekly earnings shall be deemed . . . to be the weekly sum, that under ordinary circumstances he would probably be able to earn after attaining the age of twenty-one years, in the occupation in which he was employed at the time of the injury, or the occupation to which he would reasonably have been promoted, *429 if he had not been injured." [Stats. 1915, p. 1086, sec. 6.) The Industrial Accident Commission made the award upon the assumption that "after attaining the age of twenty-one years" means a reasonable time after majority. It was the theory that if the wages being earned at the time of injury were essentially "boy's wages," then the commission might base the amount of compensation upon "the adult's wages which the same individual would be expected to reach within the few months, or perhaps even a few years after passing the age of twenty-one."
With this view of the law we cannot agree. The infirmity of the rule must be apparent when we remember that there is no rule by which the exact difference between "boy's wages" and "man's wages" may be computed. This applicant was in his twenty-first year at the time of the injury. Under the statute quoted above the commission was bound to find his probable earnings at the age of twenty-one years. Such an interpretation of the word "after" is fully in accord with sound reason and authority. For example, bequests to take effect "after death," vest at death. (In re Swinburne,
The award is annulled and the matter is remanded to the Industrial Accident Commission to the end that such proceedings *430 may be taken as are not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Shaw, J., Lennon, J., Olney, J., Wilbur, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.